And we foresaw that Best Fantasy Costume Design win for Oscar nominee “Into the Woods” over another Academy Awards contender, “Maleficent,” as well as “Guardians of the Galaxy,” “The Hobbit: Battle of the Five Armies” and “The Hunger Games: Mockingjay (Part 1).”

With all three frontrunners prevailing, 444 of our 680 users to predict the winners got perfect scores. (To see how you did, click here.) Likewise for four of our Experts — Ed Douglas (ComingSoon), Peter Travers (Rolling Stone), Susan Wloszczyna (RogerEbert.com) and me — and four of our Editors — Chris Beachum, Marcus Dixon, Daniel Montgomery and Matt Noble. Tariq Khan (Fox News) went two for three while editor Rob Licuria got one right.

Last year, “12 Years a Slave” pulled off an upset here, winning the period prize over eventual Oscar champ “The Great Gatsby” and another Oscar nominee, “American Hustle.” The other two Oscar contenders — “The Grandmaster” and “The Invisible Woman” — were snubbed by the guild. “The Hunger Games: Catching Fire” won the fantasy award at the CDG while “Blue Jasmine” prevailed in the contemporary race.

In 2011, “W.E.” won the period prize while the final “Harry Potter” picture took the fantasy genre and “The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo” claimed the contemporary category. “W.E” edged out three of the other period pictures that were in the running at the Oscars — “The Artist,” “Jane Eyre” and “Hugo” — along with “Anonymous.” The final CDG nominee, “The Help,” was snubbed by the academy. However, it was “The Artist” which prevailed at the Oscars.

In 2010, two of the three CDG period nominees — “The King’s Speech” and “True Grit” — reaped Oscar bids. In 2009, three of the CDG choices for period film costumes made the final five at the Oscars while in both 2008 and 2007 four made the cut.

By naming only three period pictures in 2010, the CDG left the Oscar field open and two of its fantasy nominees — “Alice in Wonderland” and “The Tempest” — made the grade with the Academy. Indeed, “Alice in Wonderland” won awards from both groups, marking the seventh time in the 14-year history of the the CDG that a champ of theirs prevailed at the Oscars.

The last fantasy film to prevail at the Oscars before “Alice in Wonderland” was “Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King” in 2003 while the last contemporary movie to win was “The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert” in 1994.

The 17th edition of these kudos, which also honor costume design in television and commercials, took place at the Beverly Hilton on Feb. 17, just hours after Oscar voting ended. This guild stands alone as the only one to give out its prizes after the deadline for academy members to cast their ballots.

Below, all the winners across the categories followed by your chance to predict what will win Best Period Costume Design at the Oscars using our easy drag-and-drop menu.

Make your Oscars picks now — click here — or scroll down to predict the Best Costume Design winner using our easy drag-and-drop menu. Best predictions will win $1,000 prize. And the 24 Users with the best scores advance to a team to compete against our Experts and Editors next year. See who’s in our current Top 24 and their early Oscar predictions. Meet the guy who won our contest to predict Oscar nominations this year — and learn how he did it and how you can be our next Gold Derby superstar. Register/log in to your account so you can also compete to predict the Indie Spirits, Razzies, “Survivor,” “The Amazing Race” and more.